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Date: | Mon, 3 May 2010 08:26:18 -0400 |
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>Allen described flexible inner cover approach<
That's interesting. I just removed the Imirie shims from my hives, because the bees began building burr comb in the space, some a lot, some hardly any. I think it was Mr. Harrison, who asked how that problem was avoided, and I responded that I had never had that problem, but that I always removed the shims in the early spring, once the snow melted. Well, this year was an experiment to leave them on. Besides the burr comb, I did not really like the top entrance - made it like O'Hare airport at rush hour with all the bees coming an going, while I tried to work the frames and not tick off/kill too many. I prefer that the bees enter and leave from below. Maybe they prefer the top entrance, but I did not ask.
I'll have to think about a soft inner cover as a way to solve the burr comb problem. Might be another experiment. Just need to come up with a good material. As for the nucs, the Styrofoam lids are really snug and the manufacturer doesn't make a shim. I've asked them to make them, as they would be helpful, and I am way too poor of a carpenter to make a wooden shim that would fit snugly top and bottom with rounded corners and that would not damage the plastic.
Bill
Claremont, NH, where it hit 88F/31C yesterday. Gotta love global warming.
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